Thirty-six patients affected by Parkinson's disease were studied using single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and [99mTc]–HM-PAO as a tracer. The scanning procedure was performed 16–24 h after discontinuation of specific therapy. Tracer activity ratios were determined in 10 pairs of cerebellar, cortical, and subcortical regions. Data were compared with those of 10 age-matched controls. Most of the regions examined did not show any relevant change between parkinsonian and control subjects. Notably, mean activity in striatal regions were similar in the two groups. Increased activity in caudate–putamen was found in patients who were on chronic DOPA therapy. Side-to-side asymmetries in the basal ganglia increased with the severity of the disease. Significant reductions of tracer uptake, from control values, were observed bilaterally in the parietal cortex. These deficits were more pronounced in patients with mental deterioration and in subjects who had been chronically treated with anticholinergic drugs. Parietal perfusion deficits in parkinsonian patients resemble those described in Alzheimer's dementia. These findings suggest that the heterogeneous alterations of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in parkinsonian patients reflect the multifactorial pathophysiology of the disease.
The acute effects of intravenously administered L-acetylcarnitine (LAC) were evaluated with single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and 99mTc-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime in 30 demented patients (21 with a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer’s dementia and 9 with mixed-type dementia). Two SPECT scans were performed: in basal conditions, and 30 min after the administration of 500, 1,000, 1,500, or 2,000 mg LAC intravenously. Tracer activity ratios were determined in 10 pairs of cerebellar, cortical and subcortical regions. After administration of the lowest dose of LAC, no changes from the basal values were observed in any of the regions examined. The higher doses of the drug significantly elevated the tracer activity in cortical regions, particularly in the parietal lobe, which showed an impaired regional cerebral blood flow in the basal study. These effects of LAC and their relation with the cholinomimetic properties of the drug are discussed.
Single photon emission tomography (SPET) with the novel ligand [123I]-IBZM was used to image central dopamine D2 receptors in Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients. The aim was to assess basal ganglia (BG) receptor densities in relation to the response to L-dopa therapy. To better characterize the clinical potential of [123I]-IBZM SPET, each patient underwent a second study with the regional perfusion tracer [99mTc]-HM-PAO. Tracer activity ratios were calculated for caudate and putamen with mean activity over the cerebellar hemispheres as internal standard. In PD patients we found a significant decline of mean caudate [123I]-IBZM activity, as compared with age-matched control subjects. However, when patients were grouped according to their therapeutic behavior, the [123I]-IBZM uptake in BG ganglia regions of the PD patient group with a poor and fluctuating response to L-dopa was significantly reduced from mean values of patients with a sustained response to L-dopa therapy. [99mTc]-HM-PAO caudate and putamen uptake indexes in PD were similar to control values, even in patients with deteriorated therapeutic response. Our results indicate that BG D2 receptor alterations in PD may contribute to the altered response to L-dopa.
A semiquantitative evaluation of regional cerebral blood flow was performed by means of single photon emission computed tomography and 99mTc-hexa-methylpropyleneamine oxime in 25 neurologically asymptomatic patients with essential hypertension and in 10 normotensive controls. Mean flow velocities and pulsatility indexes of intracranial arteries and the vasomotor reactivity of the middle cerebral artery after hyperventilation were assessed by means of transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD). The pattern of cerebral perfusion in hypertensive patients was similar to that of normotensive controls. However, the semiquantitative examination of the CBF flow maps revealed significantly different frontal, temporal and occipital asymmetry indexes in hypertensive patients, as an expression of disturbed perfusion. TCD did not reveal any significant difference in flow velocities between hypertensives and normotensive controls. In 10 randomly selected hypertensive patients the study was repeated after a 4-week oral treatment with the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor enalapril. Blood pressure fell significantly without any decrease in cerebral perfusion. The basal asymmetry index was also unaffected, confirming the absence of any steal effect. Thus, there are indications that focal hypoperfusion is a frequent finding among neurologically normal essential hypertensives and that the ACE inhibitor enalapril does not negatively affect cerebral blood flow in the asymptomatic essential hypertensive patients.
To date several studies have evaluated the accuracy of thallium-201 myocardial scan in risk stratification of coronary artery disease (CAD), while reports using technetium-99m methoxyisobutylisonitrile (MIBI), a tracer particularly suited to single-photon emission tomographic (SPET) imaging, are lacking. To rectify this omission, a prospective study was started in 1988 and at present 176 consecutive, and thus unselected, patients have been enrolled. All of them have been submitted to stress-rest MIBI SPET for the diagnosis or evaluation of CAD; 147 patients (121 males and 26 females, aged 53 +/- 9 years) have completed a surveillance period of at least 36 months following the scintigraphic study (range 36-60 months, mean 43). Sixty-one patients had a documented previous myocardial infarction. The mean pre-test likelihood of CAD was 44% in the patients without prior infarction. The main anamnestic, clinical, EKG and scintigraphic findings were evaluated and statistically correlated with the incidence of ensuing cardiac events using both univariate (chi-square test) and multivariate analysis (logistic regression model). Twenty-nine patients suffered from a cardiac event during the follow-up period (i.e. three cardiac deaths, six myocardial infarctions and 20 cases of unstable angina). Statistical multivariate analysis identified MIBI scan as the only highly significant and independent prognostic predictor [P = 0.006, relative risk (RR) = 17.62]. In detail, the most important scintigraphic parameters were the presence of a reversible defect (P = 0.0089, RR = 5.11) and the extension of the stress perfusion defect (P = 0.0255, RR = 3.27). The presence of typical angina proved to be a slightly significant predictor (P = 0.051, RR = 2.45), while no other examined parameter showed a significant correlation with a bad prognosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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